Chicago Sun-Times

Constructi­on giant gets$ 89M pact for Midway checkpoint­s

- BYFRANSPIE­LMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

A clout- heavy constructi­on giant once accused of minority business fraud has been awarded an $ 89.2 million contract to oversee the long- awaited expansion of passenger checkpoint­s at Midway Airport.

F. H. Paschen/ S. N. Nielsen was the lowest of only two bidders for the complex security checkpoint contract. The only other bidder — a joint venture of IHC Constructi­on and II in One Contractor­s — submitted a base bid of $ 91.2 million.

Two years ago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel drove a final nail into the long- stalled plan to privatize Midway and took the airport’s future into his “own hands” — by confrontin­g Midway’s biggest weaknesses and passenger annoyances: parking, security and concession­s.

The $ 248 million project was touted as the biggest upgrade of the Southwest Side airport since former Mayor Richard M. Daley’s $ 927 million reconstruc­tion project that included a new terminal.

It called for adding 1,400 more premium parking spaces, a Taste- of- Chicagosty­le concession makeover with more space and 27 security lanes, instead of 17, to unclog a notorious passenger bottleneck.

Paschen/ Nielsen will now preside over that dramatic increase in security checkpoint­s.

It will be made possible by widening a pedestrian bridge over Cicero Avenue — from 60 feet to 300 feet. That will create an 80,000- square- foot “security hall” with 20,000 square feet of additional concession space.

Ald. Mike Zalewski ( 23rd), chairman of the City Council’s Aviation Committee, has said he can’t wait until the security checkpoint nightmare has been put to rest.

“When that bridge first opened, there were six lanes there. And sometimes, three or four TSA security people would decide to go on break . . . and leave it down to two lanes,” Zalewski said on the day the ambitious project was unveiled.

“There have been times when the line has been all the way back to the Orange Line bus station. It was probably every bit of two blocks long. Until we got the TSA situation straighten­ed out, many, many people missed their flights because they were in line too long.”

Twelve years ago, Paschen- Nielsen was on the defensive with City Hall. It happened after the Daley administra­tion accused the constructi­on giant of minority contract fraud and took the first legal step toward barring F. H. Paschen/ S. N. Nielsen from doing business with the city.

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